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DOD's Autonomous Vessel Sails Through Transit Test, Participates in Exercise Dawn Blitz

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A Ghost Fleet Overlord unmanned surface vessel, part of a partnership between the Defense Department's Strategic Capabilities Office and the Navy, recently traveled a distance of more than 4,700 nautical miles, almost entirely autonomously. Afterward, it participated in exercise Dawn Blitz where it again spent nearly all of its underway time operating autonomously.

A boat moves through the water.
Ghost Fleet Overlord
This unmanned surface vessel, part of the Strategic Capabilities Office's Ghost Fleet Overlord program, recently made a trip from the Gulf Coast to the coast of California, almost entirely by traveling autonomously. In December, it participated in exercise Dawn Blitz, where it also demonstrated its autonomous capabilities.
Photo By: Defense Department Strategic Capabilities Office
VIRIN: 210112-D-ZZ999-003C

"This is a historic milestone for the program and the Navy. It represents what SCO does best: integrate mature technologies to accelerate service priorities and create new capabilities for our warfighters,'' Jay Dryer, director of the SCO said.

The Ghost Fleet Overlord program is part of an effort to accelerate the Navy's push to incorporate autonomous vessels within its fleet to better expand the reach of manned vessels. Autonomy includes more than just straight-line passage through large areas of the ocean; it also involves such things as collision avoidance and following the rules of the sea.

The Navy's efforts to adopt the unmanned vessel concept involve several classes of ships and an array of missions, such as offensive operations and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance with reduced risk to crew and legacy vessels. The Ghost Fleet Overlord program has demonstrated continued maturity in the autonomous USV concept since it stood up in late 2018. 

Small Navy vessels move through the water.
Fleet Formation
Amphibious assault vehicles prepare to enter the well deck of the amphibious transport dock ship USS New Orleans, August 31, 2015, during Exercise Dawn Blitz 2015. The most recent incarnation of Dawn Blitz included participation of an unmanned surface vessel that was part of the Defense Department's Ghost Fleet Overlord program.
Photo By: Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Brandon Cyr
VIRIN: 150831-N-WK391-032C

The most recent display of that maturity involved a USV traveling from the Gulf Coast to the coast of California, moving autonomously approximately 97% of the time. While the USV did have a crew on board, remote mission command and control for the trip was done from a remote location by sailors with Surface Development Squadron One.

One of the few times the USV was guided by its onboard crew was when it traversed the Panama Canal. 

Optionally manned vessels provide a stepping stone to allow the Navy and its sailors to more easily become familiar with the concept of autonomous operations than what would be possible with a fully autonomous ship.

After arriving on the West Coast of the U.S., the Ghost Fleet Overlord USV participated in December's Dawn Blitz exercise with the Navy and Marine Corps. There, it successfully demonstrated compliance with international regulations for preventing collisions at sea, station keeping, loiter and transit missions. It was the first time a Ghost Fleet Overlord USV interacted with actual assets in the Navy fleet.

Service members move through the water in inflatable boats.
Night Training
Sailors assigned to Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit 1, with Canadian and New Zealand service members, conduct nighttime training dives during amphibious exercise Dawn Blitz, June 21, 2013. The most recent incarnation of Dawn Blitz included participation of an unmanned surface vessel that was part of the Defense Department's Ghost Fleet Overlord program.
Photo By: Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Joshua Scott
VIRIN: 130621-N-FN215-941

During its participation in Dawn Blitz, the Ghost Fleet Overlord USV operated autonomously for more than 130 hours and traversed roughly 950 nautical miles — accounting for approximately 98% of its underway time.

The Ghost Fleet Overlord program has been an accelerant to the Navy's adoption of unmanned surface vessels, enabling it to more rapidly bring such vessels into the fleet.

"Our close partnership with SCO on the Overlord program is accelerating the technology demonstration, CONOPs development and operational command and control of unmanned surface vessels in direct alignment with the Navy's plans," CAPT Pete Small, Navy Program Manager for USVs, said.

A dozen Navy vessels move through the ocean.
USS Ronald Reagan and USS Bonhomme Richard
The USS Ronald Reagan and USS Bonhomme Richard lead a formation of other naval vessels in the Philippine Sea, Sept. 22, 2016. One day, some Navy ships may be operating autonomously.
Photo By: Navy Chief Petty Officer Jay Pugh
VIRIN: 160922-N-YU572-097C

To help the Navy advance its goal to incorporate autonomous vessels within the fleet, the SCO's Ghost Fleet Overlord program has taken commercial ocean-going vessels and integrated both commercially-available and government-provided equipment on board to create unmanned surface vessels. Phase II of the Ghost Fleet Overlord program, which focuses on the integration of government-furnished command-and-control systems and payloads and more complex and challenging naval operations experimentation, began in September. The SCO will transition its two Ghost Fleet Overlord prototypes to the Surface Development Squadron One by the end of fiscal year 2021. The Navy is currently acquiring two more Ghost Fleet Overlord prototypes to accompany the two SCO built to continue unmanned systems testing and fleet experimentation. 

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